16 August 2004

  • New York's currently: spores in the air conditioner
  • As over 1,000 Iraqis convene in Baghdad to determine new election processes, delegates fire up protests over U.S. strikes in Najaf, and mortars explode outside.
  • Hurricane Charley devastates Florida, leaving thousands homeless, a half-million without water, and over a million without electricity. And this is only the beginning of an active hurricane season.
  • F.B.I. preps for Republican National Convention by detaining, and in some cases, subpoenaing potential demonstrators.
  • Julia Child, 1912–2004: Julie Powell of Julie/Julia says goodbye to the chef who transformed our culinary landscape, and the one who changed her life; 1976 New Yorker profile.
  • U.S. places increased pressure on Pakistan to find Osama bin Laden before November elections.
  • Dream team creamed: U.S. men's basketball team downed by Puerto Rico in Olympics. [Apologies for the NY Post-y headline.]
  • A handy primer on your basic Icelandic pop music.
  • Decried as a show of pomp, new memo orders on-duty air marshals into coats and ties during Republican convention.
  • What the…? "Nothing better than waking up in the country and getting a cup of coffee and getting in the pickup truck and driving around and looking at the cows."
  • Warner Brothers causes stir when asking MP3 bloggers to promote a new Secret Machines song, then posting comments about how great it is.
  • With federal dollars tightening up at the end of the fiscal year, dozens of Superfund sites will see little if any of the money they need for cleanup operations.
  • Interviews with the cast of Office Space, five years on.
  • Where are we, really, in stopping the production of weapons of mass destruction?
  • Silliness, the good kind: Don't let it get your cursor!
  • The chemist is where you'd go to buy pharmaceutical drugs. Americans call it a straight drugstore, which implies to Brits that you could just buy Class A narcotics over the counter. English words with American meanings.